Title: Darwin
1Darwins Theory of Evolution
2THE BIG PICTURE
- Evolutionary Theory
- A collection of scientific facts, observations,
and hypotheses which explains the process by
which modern organisms have changed or descended
from ancient organisms.
3The Story of Darwin
- Who?
- Charles Darwin major contributor to our
understanding of evolution - What?
- He was a naturalist on the HMS Beagle.
- When?
- 5 year voyage set sail in 1831
- Where?
- Voyage went around the world with stops in South
America, Galápagos Islands, New Zealand, and
Australia - Why?
- Exploration! Darwins job was to collect and
study plant and animal specimens from all over
the world.
4The Voyage of the HMS Beagle
5Darwins Observations
- 1. Patterns of Diversity
- a. Noticed that plants and animals seemed
remarkably well suited to whatever environment
they inhabited he noticed the many ways in which
organisms survived and produced offspring. - b. Puzzled by where different species livedand
did not live similar ecosystems contained very
different types of animals
6Darwins Observations
- Living Organisms and Fossils
- Some fossils collected resembled organisms that
were still alive. Others looked completely
different.
7Darwins Observations
- The Galápagos Islands
- a. Although the islands were close together,
the islands had very different climates. And
different organisms on each island. - b. The shape of a tortoise's shell could be used
to identify which island a particular tortoise
inhabited. - c. Collected birds and noted that they had
differently shaped beaks.
8Ideas That Shaped Darwins Thinking
- In Darwins day.
- most people believed that the Earth and all its
forms of life had been created only a few
thousand years ago. - most people believed that since creation,
neither the planet nor its living things species
had changed - most people believed that rocks and major
geological features were thought to have been
produced suddenly by catastrophic events
9Scientist Date Scientific Idea
James Hutton 1785 Proposed that Earth is shaped by geological forces that took place over extremely long periods of time (rain, wind, temperature) Earth millions of years old
Thomas Malthus 1798 Predicts that the human population will grow faster than the space and food supplies needed to sustain it.
Jean-Baptists Lamarck 1809 Publishes his hypotheses of the inheritance of acquired traits. Proposes that by selective use or disuse allows organisms to lose or acquire traits.
Charles Lyell 1833 Explained that the processes occurring now have shaped Earths geological features over long periods of time.
10Lamarck's Evolution Hypotheses
A male fiddler crab uses its front claw to ward
off predators and to attract mates.
11Lamarck's Evolution Hypotheses
Because the front claw is used repeatedly, it
becomes larger. This characteristic (large claw)
is passed onto its offspring.
12Publication of On the Origin of Species
- Darwin filled notebooks with his ideas about
species diversity and the evolution process. - Darwin was stunned and disturbed by his
discoveries. - He shelved his manuscript for years and told his
wife to publish it in case he died.
13Publication of On the Origin of Species
- In 1858, Darwin received a short essay from
naturalist Alfred Wallace. - The essay summarized Darwins thoughts on
evolutionary change. - Later that year, Wallaces essay was presented
with some of Darwins work. - In 1859, Darwin published his book, On the Origin
of Species.
Wallace
Darwin
14- http//biologyinmotion.com/evol/index.html
15Inherited Variation and Artificial Selection
- Members of each species vary from one another in
important ways variations are heritable. - Darwin noted that plant and animal breeders would
breed only the largest hogs, the fastest horses,
or the cows that produced the most milk. - Darwin termed this process artificial selection.
Artificial selection is the selection by humans
for breeding of useful traits from the natural
variation among different organisms.
16Evolution by Natural Selection
- Struggle for Existence
- Survival of the Fittest
- a. Fitness
- b. Adaptation
- c. Natural Selection
- 3. Descent with Modification
17Evolution by Natural Selection
- Struggle for Existence
- Darwin realized that high birth rates and a
shortage of life's basic needs would force
organisms to compete for resources. - Members of each species compete regularly to
obtain food, living space, and other necessities
of life. -
18Evolution by Natural Selection
- Survival of the Fittest
- The ability of an individual to survive and
reproduce in its specific environment is fitness.
- Darwin proposed that fitness is the result of
adaptations. - An adaptation is any inherited characteristic
that increases an organism's chance of survival. - Successful adaptations enable organisms to become
better suited to their environment and better
able to survive and reproduce.
19Evolution by Natural Selection
- Survival of the Fittest
- Individuals with characteristics that are not
well suited to their environment either die or
leave few offspring. - Individuals that are better suited to their
environment survive and reproduce most
successfully. - Darwin called this process survival of the
fittest.
20Evolution by Natural Selection
- Natural Selection
- Over time, natural selection results in changes
in the inherited characteristics of a population.
These changes increase a species' fitness in its
environment.
21Evolution by Natural Selection
- Descent with Modification
- Natural selection produces organisms that have
different structures, establish different niches,
or occupy different habitats. - Each living species has descended, with changes,
from other species over time. - Darwin referred to this principle as descent with
modification.
22Evidence of Evolution
- The Fossil Record
- Geographic Distribution of Living Species
- Homologous Body Structures
- Similarities in Embryology
23Evidence of Evolution
- The Fossil Record
- By comparing fossils from older rock layers with
fossils from younger layers, scientists could
document that life on Earth has changed over
time.
24Evidence of EvolutionGeographic Distribution of
Living Things
- 1. Because of their similarities, Darwin decided
that all Galápagos finches could have descended
with modification from a common mainland
ancestor.
25Evidence of EvolutionGeographic Distribution
- 2. Species now living on different continents had
each descended from different ancestors. However,
because some animals on each continent were
living under similar ecological conditions, they
were exposed to similar pressures of natural
selection and different animals ended up evolving
certain features in common.
26Evidence of Evolution
- Homologous Body Structures
- Structures that have different mature forms but
develop from the same embryonic tissues are
called homologous structures. - Similarities and differences in homologous
structures help biologists group animals
according to how recently they last shared a
common ancestor.
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28Evidence of Evolution
- Vestigial Organs
- Not all homologous structures serve important
functions. - The organs of many animals are so reduced in size
that they are just vestiges, or traces, of
homologous organs in other species. - These organs are called vestigial organs.
29Evidence of Evolution
- Similarities in Embryology
- The early stages, or embryos, of many animals
with backbones are very similar. - The same groups of embryonic cells develop in the
same order and in similar patterns to produce the
tissues and organs of all vertebrates.
30Summary of Darwin's Theory
- Individual organisms differ, and some of this
variation is heritable. - Organisms produce more offspring than can
survive, and many that do survive do not
reproduce. - Because more organisms are produced than can
survive, they compete for limited resources.
31Summary of Darwin's Theory
- Individuals best suited to their environment
survive and reproduce most successfully. - These organisms pass their heritable traits to
their offspring. Other individuals die or leave
fewer offspring. - This process of natural selection causes species
to change over time.